Bowen v. Wolff
Bowen v. Wolff
Opinion of the Court
The complainant is the owner of a house and lot on Prairie avenue, in Providence, adjoining the respondent’s lot on the same street. The respondent is a physician who has attended the complainant professionally, and they were - also on very friendly relations as neighbors. The complainant, an elderly single woman, living alone, is evidently unskilled in business matters, while the respondent is greatly her superior in this respect.
This bill is brought to cancel or reform the lease. Several facts are apparent upon the testimony of the defendant himself. No term of years was agreed upon before the preparation of the lease. The lease may run for twenty years, although no such time was previously mentioned, and this term was split into two parts — a term of five years with a privilege to renew for fifteen years more, which could easily escape the attention of a more experienced lessor. The complainant was evidently intending a friendly accommodation of the respondent, and relying upon him in the preparation of the lease, after having stated that three years was long enough. While he testifies that, she said he could have it as long as he wanted it, she denies this ; and he did not tell her that the term was possibly for twenty years. Neither did he expressly describe the strip the lease was to cover, all the talk having been about an office building simply. The lease, in fact, covers eleven and a half feet from the front to the rear of the lot, and thus the line runs a foot and a half under the front part of the house. The words “ for the purpose of an office ” were in the lease, but erased. .The lease was not executed in duplicate, and no copy was given to the complainant.
Upon these facts we think it is clear that the lease should not be allowed to stand in its present form.
While no actual fraud is charged, and while we have no doubt that the lease was fully read to her by the attorney before whom it was executed, it is evident that she did not comprehend what she was doing, and that advantage was' taken by the respondent in this respect.
The lease was recorded on the next day after its execution, and when, shortly after, the respondent began to take down *59 the front fence, the complainant at once came out and objected to it. Her conduct corroborates her testimony — that she had no such understanding of the lease. The respondent admits that it was moved against her protest.
With the lease as it stands, the complainant cannot repair one side of her house without the respondent’s permission to enter upon the leased land, and the office is built so close to the house that the rear corner on that side cannot be.repaired at all. She has still to pay taxes on the leased land, and her house encroaches on it from the rear corner to a foot and five and a half inches at the front corner. 'No person, with proper understanding, would have consented to such a lease. We cannot think that the complainant would have signed such a lease if she had comprehended it, or had taken independent advice. She relied on the respondent’s apparently friendly relation to her, and for that reason had confidence that he would not take advantage of her. The lease was not left with her to examine, but it was hurriedly executed, and, after what had been said, she took no time for deliberation. The rule in such cases is well stated in 24 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, 966 : “ Courts of equity will not under all circumstances relieve persons from hard bargains on the ground that they have been taken by surprise. But in many cases courts have given relief from unconscionable contracts where one has been suddenly and unexpectedly placed in a position in which he could not properly exercise his own judgment, especially if h'e acted under the persuasion of those upon whose judgment he relied, or if a false representation was made to him, even though it were made in good faith, or if he was importunately pressed by the other party and acted without time for deliberation and consultation with friends.” ■
In this case we think that the contract was unconscionable, the result of importunity and impulsive action, based upon confidence reposed in the respondent, who treated with the complainant on unequal terms.
In Hoppin v. Tobey, 9 R. I. 42, Jenkins had given to Tobey certain real estate for past services as his attorney in fact. In view of this confidential relation and the lack of indifferent *60 consultation, the court held that the deed should be set aside, although there was no suggestion of fraud or imposition nor of designed exercise of influence acquired by this relation to procure the deed.
Brown v. Hall, 14 R. I. 249, went further. In that case the complainant, an attorney at law, applied to the defendant, a broker, for a loan, to be secured by a mortgage on an undivided interest in realty worth about $10,000. The defendant loaned $2,000, with interest at the rate of five per cent, per month, the principal and-installments of interest to run at the same rate until paid. The statute allowed parties to make their own agreement as to interest. On a bill to redeem, the court held the contract as made should not be enforced because of its unconscionable character and the fact that although the complainant read the note he did not comprehend its terms. The court also said that the complainant went to the respondent as a broker, and when the latter received the application he assumed a protective relation towards the complainant, and although they dealt directly, the respondent was bound, instead of overreaching him, to look out for him. It was his duty to give him full and true information and to be sure that he understood the contract.
Such a rule of duty applies with equal force to one acting as a friend, and with far greater force to a treaty with one who, not a member of the bar, as in that case, is a woman ignorant of legal forms and covenants, as well as of business transactions.
In Baker v. Monk, 4 DeG. J. & S. 388, the remarks of Lord Justice Knight Bruce are quite applicable to the case at bar. “The vendor was a single woman in humble life, of slender education, between sixty and seventy years of age, unprotected and unaided, and the purchaser a substantial ti-adesman. He placed the matter in the hands of his lawyer. The lawyer drew the instrument, with good intentions, but without consulting any other person, and brought it to the respondent for execution, and she executed it under his advice-alone. The deed, in one respect at least, is not framed with sufficient attention to the .interests of the vendor, although *61 probably with no wrong intention. The transaction was thus begun and ended without any advice, on her part. The purchaser and vendor were in such relative positions as that, according to the known established doctrine of this court, it lies on the purchaser to show affirmatively that the price given is the value.” .
In Brown v. Lamphear, 35 Vt. 252, the rule is stated, quoting Chief Justice Bedfield’s edition of Story’s Equity Jurisprudence, volume 1, section 138, i, that where the mistake is of so fundamental a character that the minds of the parties have never, in fact, met; or where an unconscionable advantage has been gained by mere mistake or misapprehension, and there was no gross negligence on the part of the plaintiff either in falling into the error or in not sooner claiming redress, and no intervening rights have accrued, and the parties may still be placed in statu quo, equity will interfere, in its discretion, to prevent intolerable injustice. See also Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, 2 ed. vol. 14, p. 20, and cases cited.
In this case we see no escape from the conclusion that the respondent took advantage of the generous and trustful spirit of the complainant. When asked as a witness before the master whether he considered the lease a wise one for her to make, he declined to answer, under advice of counsel. He certainly shows no advantage to her except the paltry rental which she mentioned, and which he regarded as too small and voluntarily increased. He admits most serious disadvantages by filing stipulations that he does not claim any right under the lease to any portion of the land actually occupied by the walls of the complainant’s house; that,he does not intend to build upon the front portion of the land, which would completely block her windows on that side of her house; that he assents to her entering upon the-land to make repairs on her house; and that he assents to a'reappraisal of the rent for the extended term of fifteen years.
The mere statement of these proposed concessions only makes more clear, if this were possible, the harsh and improvident character of the lease, as he himself procured it to be drawn. Naturally there are exaggerations in the com *62 plainant’s statements of what she considers to be unfriendly and deceptive treatment by one in whom she trusted; but, basing our opinion almost wholly upon the respondent’s own testimony, we find that there was this relation of confidence on her part; that she did agree to give him a lease, for at least three years, of the rear part of the lot, hut not of the front part; that the term of five years, as read to her in the lease, must be regarded as having been acquiesced in by the complainant; that there was no mention whatever of a renewal clause, and that this, separated from the specified term of five years by long covenants as to payment of rent, surrender, etc., .was not understood nor agreed to by her. So placed, it might easily fail, to catch her attention, even if she had been familiar with such instruments. Indeed, since the rent was to he the same, the term might have been made twenty years, instead of adding a renewal clause, but for the fact that if the doctor should choose to remove he would not be hampered by the longer term, and if he did not he could retain it. Every advantage was put upon his side.
Under these findings we will direct a decree reforming the lease by striking out the renewal clause and limiting the land leased to that covered by the respondent’s building as it now stands.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Catherine Bowen v. Horace H. Wolff.
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